2 comments:

Two books you might want to think about having on this list. The first is by Dow/Savile (two former Bank of Nngland economists) "A critique of monetary policy". Written in the early 80s, partly as a response to the wave of enthusiasm for monetary targets. Not widely known, but an excellent book on how the banking system "really" functions, and how the money stock in practice gets determined. One of the most instructive and persuasive accounts of endogenous money I have read. The second is Bindseil's "Implementation of monetary policy". More modern (post 2000), and more technical. Written by an ECB economist, but very good on how monetary policy is actually implemented in practice (what different instruments can be used, how they work, and so on).